Homeopathic practice is built around several persistent observations: individual remedy selection, potency dependence, response-guided repetition, proving, similia, and whole-system change rather than isolated symptom suppression. These observations are traditionally described in clinical language, but they remain difficult to express in a unified operational model. This paper proposes an OUXSPACE-derived theoretical framework in which a homeopathically prepared remedy is treated not as a conventional chemical dose, but as a preparation-specific structural regime. Its biological relevance is not assigned to the remedy name, nominal substance, or concentration alone. Instead, it is defined by the relation between the preparation-state and the current receiver-state of the living system. The present paper extends previous OUXSPACE-derived work on homeopathic potentization, preparation-dependent biological threshold crossing, water-hexamer relay structures, biological readability, and water as an active medium. The central concept introduced here is Receiver–Leakage Specificity. A preparation-state becomes biologically meaningful only when it is accepted by the organism with sufficient receiver acceptance, lost minimally as noise or defensive leakage, translated into coherent biological manifestation, and aligned with a restorative direction toward a healthier basin. In this framework, the “correct remedy” is not the strongest input, but the input that the organism can receive, translate, and use with the lowest loss toward restoration. The possibility that ultra-high dilutions may show preparation-dependent physicochemical differences has been discussed through thermodynamic, thermoluminescent, nanoparticulate, and nanostructural perspectives. The model introduces several operational quantities: receiver acceptance, receiver leakage, biological translation, restorative transition index, local susceptibility, potency-depth matching, integration window, restorative coherence signature, cumulative pattern load, and response-type discrimination. Potency is interpreted as the depth and fineness of structural input, while repetition is interpreted through an integration window rather than through dose accumulation. Proving is formulated as pattern-induced receiver shift in a healthy or stable organism under repeated exposure, while therapeutic similia is formulated as directional pattern inversion: a preparation-state that can induce a symptom pattern in a healthy organism may help a sick organism exit a similar pattern when receiver-state, potency, leakage, and restorative direction are compatible. The proposed framework also distinguishes restorative response from symptom suppression, noisy reaction, proving-like shift, and unreadable input. A minimal testable protocol is outlined using receiver-state stratification, matched preparation, mismatch control, matched sham, no-input observation, and restorative coherence as the primary response signature. The aim of this work is not to replace clinical observation with a single formula, but to provide a coherent theoretical and operational language for investigating how weak preparation-specific inputs may become biologically readable only under specific receiver-state conditions.
Balevsky et al. (Thu,) studied this question.